Sheinelle Jones completed a feat of feet when she ran the New York City Marathon on Nov. 5 — and her TODAY family was there to cheer her on.
Sheinelle, who announced in August her intention to run the famed race, gave TODAY viewers a behind-the-scenes look at her race-day experience, as she was one of 50,000 runners tackling the course.
At the starting line, Sheinelle read some letters her TODAY co-hosts wrote to her, including one from Craig Melvin that got her choked up.

“‘S. Jones, I’ve never been prouder of you, my friend. May all the things you’re dealing with right now be the wind at your back for the next 26.2. Crush it. Love, Craig,’” she said, while fighting back tears.
“Thank you, guys. Oh, my goodness gracious. I can’t do the ugly cry yet.”
Shortly after 9 a.m., Sheinelle started the race, calling the first few miles “easy and breezy” before she reached her first true test about 15 miles in at the 59th Street Bridge.
“There’s a moment when you’re on the bridge, several bridges, and no one else is around and you just hear breath and the pitter-patter of feet,” she said.

Sheinelle was spurred on by her friends and co-workers.
“I think the best part is when your legs can’t carry you anymore and then the sound of the crowd carries you,” she said.
At one point along her route in Manhattan, she stopped to hug Al Roker, while Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb and Dylan Dreyer also cheered her on.
Hoda’s children even made signs to support Sheinelle.
Xem bài viết này trên Instagram
“Sheinelle, we are so proud of you!” Savannah yelled at one point. “Let’s go, Sheinelle!”
Sheinelle also took a moment to greet them and her husband and kids, who showered her with hugs and kisses.

Eventually, Sheinelle crossed the finish line in four hours, 41 minutes.
“Everybody says it’s amazing,” she said. “They say it’s one of the best days of your life. It transcends running. And every time you feel like you can’t run anymore, there’s somebody cheering your name. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience. If there’s anybody listening to me, and you’ve ever wanted to challenge yourself and step out of your comfort zone, do it.”
Sheinelle, of course, knows she didn’t do it alone and made sure to thank everyone who rallied behind her.
“I did this. I feel like you did this with me, all of your positive notes, DMs, social media. So this is for you, too,” she said, holding the medal she got for finishing the marathon.
Sheinelle marveled at her accomplishment, calling it “one of the best days of my life” and “the longest and most rewarding 4 hours and 41 minutes of my life” on Instagram.
She was visibly moved while talking about her experience Nov. 6 on TODAY.

“Yesterday was about so much more than finishing the last leg of this monthlong journey,” she said. “It was about taking in the energy of the city and digging deeper into myself.”
She also gave credit to fellow runners and TODAY family members Yosef and Rainy, who encouraged her and completed the race alongside her.
“These two are just beautiful human beings,” she said.
“It transcends running,” Sheinelle said about the race. “You have people from all over the world who are here with all sorts of trouble. Anytime we would start to feel like we couldn’t do it, we would look to our left and someone would be running with one leg. We’d look to our right and someone’s running in a wheelchair.”
She reiterated that sentiment on the 3rd hour of TODAY, while also explaining that her family was her motivation during the race.
“I had my kids’ initials on my arm, my husband’s initials, and it said ‘just do it.’ They are my reason why,” she said.
News
I watched my ex-husband’s engagement party stop breathing the second I walked in pregnant with triplets beside a man far more powerful than him.
You keep staring at Fernando Castillo’s photograph on the laptop screen long after the old fan in the rented room begins to rattle like loose bones in the ceiling. There is something almost offensive about how composed he looks in…
I saw a homeless man wearing my missing son’s jacket — and I decided to follow him.
The last time I saw Daniel, the house was full of morning light. It streamed through the tall kitchen windows in pale winter bands, illuminating the floating dust in the air and turning the steam from my coffee into…
My neighbor turned my garden into her dumpster—so I brought her a GIFT she’ll never forget.
People see the wheelchair before they see me. They always do. It rolls into view first—quiet, metal, practical. A machine that announces limitation before a man even opens his mouth. And once they’ve noticed it, everything else becomes secondary. My…
SIX WORDS IN A U.S. HEARING JUST REOPENED ONE OF AMERICA’S DARKEST UNANSWERED QUESTIONS.
The six woгds thɑt fгoze the гoom: Keппedy coгпeгs Boпdi oveг Epsteiп’s deɑth — ɑпd heг ɑпsweг oпly deepeпs the mysteгy A heɑгiпg гoom goes still It wɑs just six woгds. But iп thɑt pɑcked coпgгessioпɑl heɑгiпg гoom, they lɑпded…
He looked me in the eye, ordered me to erase my brother’s disaster, and expected me to say yes
PART 1 – The Table Already Set By the time Kesha Williams turned onto her parents’ block on the South Side, the sky had the color of old pewter, and the wind coming off the lake had sharpened into something…
THEY FORGOT I HAD ALREADY COUNTED EVERY DOLLAR THEY EVER TOOK FROM ME.
PART 1 – Immersive Opening & Emotional Hook By the time Kesha Williams turned onto her parents’ block on the South Side, dusk had already begun to settle over Chicago in that blue-gray way that made every house seem to…
End of content
No more pages to load